Willow: You know what they say. The bigger they are... Anya: The faster they stomp you into nothin'.

'The Killer In Me'


We're Literary 2: To Read Makes Our Speaking English Good  

There's more to life than watching Buffy the Vampire Slayer! No. Really, there is! Honestly! Here's a place for Buffistas to come and discuss what it is they're reading, their favorite authors and poets. "Geez. Crack a book sometime."


deborah grabien - Apr 10, 2004 8:21:14 pm PDT #2145 of 10002
It really doesn't matter. It's just an opinion. Don't worry about it. Not worth the hassle.

Rankin totally rocks.

I've got addicted to the Alfred Hitchcock and Ellery Queen Mystery magaines. You get a superb scattering of short stories, and it's a brilliant way to discover new writers.


Angus G - Apr 10, 2004 11:09:18 pm PDT #2146 of 10002
Roguish Laird

I love Reginald Hill too, Susan! Ian Rankin on the other hand I think is rather overrated.


Gris - Apr 10, 2004 11:49:59 pm PDT #2147 of 10002
Hey. New board.

Just finished reading Neal Stephenson's The Diamond Age for the third or fourth time. I find it less fun than Snow Crash and less impressive than Cryptonomicon/Quicksilver but I think I might like it better than any of them. Probably because I empathize best, in novels, with young girls - rather strange, considering I'm a 20-year-old male.

The nanotechnology ideas explored in this book are way cool, too. More interesting than his other more normal computer-focused books, I think.


§ ita § - Apr 11, 2004 6:27:54 am PDT #2148 of 10002
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

Ian Rankin has had me drinking sweet milky tea at every reasonable opportunity since reading The Hanging Garden. That's very powerful work.

In fact, I'm going to brew a cuppa right now.

I think a couple of my McDermid's have come into the library this week. Way too much reading to do.


P.M. Marc - Apr 11, 2004 7:32:25 am PDT #2149 of 10002
So come, my friends, be not afraid/We are so lightly here/It is in love that we are made; In love we disappear

Just finished reading Neal Stephenson's The Diamond Age for the third or fourth time. I find it less fun than Snow Crash and less impressive than Cryptonomicon/Quicksilver but I think I might like it better than any of them.

I know I like The Diamond Age as Stephenson's best. At least, it's the only one I re-read on a regular basis. I think its characters feel the most human.


RobertH - Apr 11, 2004 9:19:12 am PDT #2150 of 10002
Disaffected college student

(wonders how NC and Plei knew he wanted to mention that he'd just finished Quicksilver)

I have trouble rating books comparatively, as those I haven't read recently are hard for me to remember concretely. I liked The Diamond Age, but it was verging on the edge of ridiculousness for me near the end.

I was shocked to find that I wasn't nearly as impatient with the historical world-building in Quicksilver as I was with that in Cryptonomicon. I guess the Enlightenment is more fun that World War II for me. Need to go put in an order for The Confusion.

I'm currently reading Pattern Recognition, my first Gibson.

As I recently expressed elsewhere, books cost too much.


hun_e - Apr 11, 2004 10:51:12 am PDT #2151 of 10002
Meanwhile, back at the Hall of Justice...

Yeah... I just finished reading O Jerusalem the other day for the third time or so... It's one of my faves in the Russell/Holmes series, my least favourite being A Letter of Mary, my most being Monstrous Regiment of Women. If anyone likes cosy mysteries the Aunt Dimity series by (I think) Nancy Atherton is good... entertaining and fun for an afternoon on the patio or in front of a fire (depending on the season). I also just finished reading The Poisonwood Bible by Barbara Kingsolver and was totally blown away by it... so different from her earlier stuff (which was also good), but one of those books whose characters have stayed with me.


Gris - Apr 11, 2004 10:53:43 am PDT #2152 of 10002
Hey. New board.

I liked The Diamond Age, but it was verging on the edge of ridiculousness for me near the end.

It does do that, no doubt. But then, Snow Crash gets pretty ridiculous near the end, too. I think Neal Stephenson, like Greg Egan, is one of those science fiction authors that has issues bringing straight science fiction to a close without getting weird. Luckily, such doesn't bother me.


RobertH - Apr 11, 2004 11:15:45 am PDT #2153 of 10002
Disaffected college student

It does do that, no doubt. But then, Snow Crash gets pretty ridiculous near the end, too.

From what I can vaguely remember of my reading of Snow Crash, it was weird enough from the very beginning that it didn't bother me. But, see, I could not begin to tell you how it ended. So.

(I should reread it, but my copy is kinda . . . grossified. Book loaners beware. Yuck.)


P.M. Marc - Apr 11, 2004 12:37:39 pm PDT #2154 of 10002
So come, my friends, be not afraid/We are so lightly here/It is in love that we are made; In love we disappear

I think his last solid ending was in Zodiac, but that's a completely different style of book.

Diamond Age's ending grew on me. Snow Crash's made me roll my eyes the second or third time I read it.